Tag Archives: covid vaccines

Pfizer’s COVID-19 Vaccine Linked to Blood Clotting: FDA

Pfizer’s COVID-19 vaccine has been linked to blood clotting in older individuals, according to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).

FDA researchers, crunching data from a database of elderly persons in the United States, found that pulmonary embolism—blood clotting in the lungs—met the initial threshold for a statistical signal and continued meeting the criteria after a more in-depth evaluation.

Three other outcomes of interest—a lack of oxygen to the heart, a blood platelet disorder called immune thrombocytopenia, and another type of clotting called intravascular coagulation—initially raised red flags, researchers said. More in-depth evaluations, such as comparisons with populations who received influenza vaccines, showed those three as no longer meeting the statistical threshold for a signal.

Researchers looked at data covering 17.4 million elderly Americans who received a total of 34.6 million vaccine doses between Dec. 10, 2020, and Jan. 16, 2022.

The study was published by the journal Vaccine on Dec. 1.

The FDA said it was not taking any action on the results because they do not prove the vaccines cause any of the four outcomes, and because the findings “are still under investigation and require more robust study.”

Dr. Peter McCullough, chief medical adviser for the Truth for Health Foundation, told The Epoch Times via email that the new paper “corroborates the concerns of doctors that the large uptick in blood clots, progression of atherosclerotic heart disease, and blood disorders is independently associated with COVID-19 vaccination.”

Pfizer did not respond to a request for comment.

A pedestrian walks by Pfizer’s New York City headquarters in a file photograph. (Jeenah Moon/Getty Images)

How the Research Was Done

FDA researchers, with assistance from researchers with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), analyzed data from the CMS database. They included Medicare Fee-for-Service beneficiaries aged 65 or older who received a vaccine within the timeframe, were enrolled when they were vaccinated, and were enrolled for a “clean window” of time prior to vaccination. The window was 183 days or 365 days, depending on the outcome.

About 25 million people receive the Medicare Fee-for-Service, but only about 17 million were vaccinated during the period of time studied.

Researchers used probability testing to detect an increased risk of one or more of 14 outcomes following vaccination. The goal was to see whether vaccination may increase the risk of adverse outcomes, such as pulmonary embolism, or blood clotting in the lungs. If an outcome met a certain statistical threshold, that meant it could increase the risk.

The initial results of the safety monitoring detected an increased risk of four events, the FDA announced on July 12, 2021. They were the same four outlined in the new paper, which is the first update the agency has given on the matter since its announcement.

As of Jan. 15, 2022, 9,065 cases of a lack of oxygen to the heart—known as acute myocardial infarction—were detected, researchers revealed in the new study. As of the same date, 6,346 cases of pulmonary embolism, 1,064 cases of immune thrombocytopenia, and 263 cases of the coagulation were detected.

One of the tables from the new paper.

The primary analysis showed a safety signal for all four outcomes. Researchers tried adjusting the numbers by using different variables. For instance, at one point they adjusted for the variation of background rates, or the rates of each outcome in the general population prior to the pandemic. After certain adjustments—not all—the myocardial infarction, immune thrombocytopenia, and intravascular coagulation ceased being statistically significant.

Pulmonary embolism, though, continued to be statistically significant, the researchers said. Pulmonary embolism is a serious condition that can lead to death.

Limitations of the study included possible false signals and possible missed signals due to factors such as parameters being specified wrongly.

The conditions that didn’t trigger a signal included stroke, heart inflammation, and appendicitis.

The signals were detected only after Pfizer vaccination. Analyses for signals after receipt of the Moderna and Johnson & Johnson vaccines did not show any concerns.

Moderna and Johnson & Johnson did not respond to requests for comment.

Side Effects

All three vaccines have been linked to a number of side effects. Heart inflammation is causally linked to the Moderna and Pfizer shots, experts around the world have confirmed, while Johnson & Johnson’s has been associated with blood clots.

Other conditions, such as pulmonary embolism, have been reported to authorities and described in studies, though some papers have found no increase in risk following vaccination.

Approximately 4,214 reports of post-vaccination pulmonary embolism, including 1,886 reports following receipt of Pfizer’s vaccine, have been reported to the U.S. Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System as of Dec. 9.

As of the same date, 1,434 reports of post-vaccination myocardial infarction, including 736 following receipt of Pfizer’s vaccine; 469 reports of post-vaccination immune thrombocytopenia, including 234 following receipt of Pfizer’s vaccine; and 78 reports of post-vaccination intravascular coagulation, including 42 after receipt of Pfizer’s vaccine, have been reported.

Reports to the system can be made by anybody, but most are lodged by health care workers, studies show. The number of reports are an undercount, according to studies.

The new study states that the FDA “strongly believes the potential benefits of COVID-19 vaccination outweigh the potential risks of COVID-19 infection.” No evidence was cited in support of the belief.

The FDA is set to meet with its vaccine advisory panel in January 2023 about the future of COVID-19 vaccines, as the vaccines have been performing much worse against Omicron and its subvariants.

McCullough told The Epoch Times: “A shortcoming of the CMS surveillance system is that it did not capture prior and subsequent SARS-CoV-2 infection which accentuate the cumulative risk of COVID-19 vaccination. Given the large number of individuals who have been vaccinated, the population attributable fraction of medical problems ascribed to the vaccines is enormous. I have concerns over the future burden to the healthcare system as a consequence of mass indiscriminate COVID-19 vaccination.”

Zachary Stieber is a senior reporter for The Epoch Times based in Maryland. He covers U.S. and world news.

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The High Cost of Disparaging Natural Immunity to Covid

Public-health officials ruined many lives by insisting that workers with natural immunity to Covid-19 be fired if they weren’t fully vaccinated. But after two years of accruing data, the superiority of natural immunity over vaccinated immunity is clear. By firing staff with natural immunity, employers got rid of those least likely to infect others. It’s time to reinstate those employees with an apology.

For most of last year, many of us called for the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to release its data on reinfection rates, but the agency refused. Finally last week, the CDC released data from New York and California, which demonstrated natural immunity was 2.8 times as effective in preventing hospitalization and 3.3 to 4.7 times as effective in preventing Covid infection compared with vaccination.

Yet the CDC spun the report to fit its narrative, bannering the conclusion “vaccination remains the safest strategy.” It based this conclusion on the finding that hybrid immunity—the combination of prior infection and vaccination—was associated with a slightly lower risk of testing positive for Covid. But those with hybrid immunity had a similar low rate of hospitalization (3 per 10,000) to those with natural immunity alone. In other words, vaccinating people who had already had Covid didn’t significantly reduce the risk of hospitalization.

Similarly, the National Institutes of Health repeatedly has dismissed natural immunity by arguing that its duration is unknown—then failing to conduct studies to answer the question. Because of the NIH’s inaction, my Johns Hopkins colleagues and I conducted the study. We found that among 295 unvaccinated people who previously had Covid, antibodies were present in 99% of them up to nearly two years after infection. We also found that natural immunity developed from prior variants reduced the risk of infection with the Omicron variant. Meanwhile, the effectiveness of the two-dose Moderna vaccine against infection (not severe disease) declines to 61% against Delta and 16% against Omicron at six months, according to a recent Kaiser Southern California study. In general,

Pfizer’s

Covid vaccines have been less effective than Moderna’s.

The CDC study and ours confirm what more than 100 other studies on natural immunity have found: The immune system works. The largest of these studies, from Israel, found that natural immunity was 27 times as effective as vaccinated immunity in preventing symptomatic illness.

None of this should surprise us. For years, studies have shown that infection with the other coronaviruses that cause severe illness, SARS and MERS, confers lasting immunity. In a study published in May 2020, Covid-recovered monkeys that were rechallenged with the virus didn’t get sick.

Public-health officials have a lot of explaining to do. They used the wrong starting hypothesis, ignored contrary preliminary data, and dug in as more evidence emerged that called their position into question. Many, including

Rochelle Walensky,

now the CDC’s director, signed the John Snow memorandum in October 2020, which declared that “there is no evidence for lasting protective immunity to SARS-CoV-2 following natural infection.”

Many clinicians who talk to other physicians nationwide had have long observed that we don’t see reinfected patients end up on a ventilator or die from Covid, with rare exceptions who almost always have immune disorders. Meanwhile, public-health officials recklessly destroyed the careers of everyday Americans, rallying to fire pilots, truck drivers and others in the supply-chain workforce who didn’t get vaccinated. And in the early months of the vaccine rollout, when supplies were limited, we could have saved many more lives by giving priority to those who didn’t have recorded natural immunity.

The failure to recognize the data on natural immunity is hurting U.S. hospitals, especially in rural areas. MultiCare, a hospital system in Washington state, fired 55 staff members on Oct. 18 for being out of compliance with

Gov. Jay Inslee’s

vaccine mandate—and that was in addition to an undisclosed number of staffers who quit ahead of the vaccination deadline. The loss of workers contributed to a full-blown staffing crisis.

It got so bad that the hospital summoned staff who were Covid-positive to return to work even if they were sick, according to an internal memo obtained by

Jason Rantz

of KTTH radio. The memo stated that “positive staff with mild to moderate illness” could work, so long as they wear appropriate personal protective equipment, don’t take breaks with others, and agree to stay home “if symptoms worsen.” Managers were recommended to assign Covid-positive staff to Covid-positive patients and vaccinated patients, but not immunosuppressed patients.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services took the hospital mandate national by decreeing that all medical facilities under its jurisdiction require vaccination for employees, including those with natural immunity. The Supreme Court upheld the rule on Jan. 13, the same day it issued a stay against a similar mandate from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which OSHA formally withdrew Tuesday.

Connecticut has suspended its vaccine mandate for state employees, and

Starbucks

is rehiring employers fired for being unvaccinated. Other states and businesses should follow their lead. Politicians and public-health officials owe an apology to Americans who lost their jobs on the false premises that only unvaccinated people could spread the virus and only vaccination could prevent its spread. Soldiers who have been dishonorably discharged should be restored their rank. Teachers, first responders, and others who have been denied their livelihood should be reinstated. Everyone is essential.

Dr. Makary is a professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine and author of “The Price We Pay: What Broke American Health Care and How to Fix It.”

Wonder Land: The weaponization of ‘science’ began with climate policy and accelerated with Covid-19. Now many think it’s all misinformation. Images: AFP/Getty Images Composite: Mark Kelly

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Vaccines Can Become Variant-Proof, Says New Study Amid Omicron Alert

Microscope image showing a human cell (pink) heavily infected with SARS-CoV-2 virus particles.

Researchers at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) have found rare, naturally occurring T cells that are capable of targeting a protein found in SARS-CoV-2 and a range of other Coronaviruses.

The findings suggested that a component of this protein, called viral polymerase, could potentially be added to COVID-19 vaccines to create a longer-lasting immune response and increase protection against new variants of the virus.

Most COVID-19 vaccines use a part of the spike protein found on the surface of the virus to prompt the immune system to produce antibodies. However, newer variants – such as Delta and Omicron – carry mutations to the spike protein, which can make them less recognisable to the immune cells and antibodies stimulated by vaccination. Researchers said that a new generation of vaccines will likely be needed to create a more robust and wide-ranging immune response capable of beating back current variants and those that may arise in the future.

One way to accomplish this was by adding a fragment of a different viral protein to vaccines – one that is less prone to mutations than the spike protein and that will activate the immune system’s T cells. T cells are equipped with molecular receptors on their surfaces that recognise foreign protein fragments called antigens. When a T cell encountered an antigen its receptor recognised, it self-replicated and produced additional immune cells, some of which target and kill infected cells immediately and others which remain in the body for decades to fight that same infection should it ever return.

The researchers focused on the viral polymerase protein, which is found not only in SARS-CoV-2 but in other Coronaviruses, including those that cause SARS, MERS, and the common cold. Viral polymerases serve as engines that Coronaviruses use to make copies of themselves, enabling infection to spread. Unlike the spike protein, viral polymerases are unlikely to change or mutate, even as viruses evolve.

To determine whether or not the human immune system has T cell receptors capable of recognising viral polymerase, the researchers exposed blood samples from healthy human donors (collected prior to the COVID-19 pandemic) to the viral polymerase antigen. They found that certain T cell receptors did, in fact, recognise the polymerase. They then used a method they developed called CLInt-Seq to genetically sequence these receptors. Next, the researchers engineered T cells to carry these polymerase-targeting receptors, which enabled them to study the receptors’ ability to recognise and kill SARS-CoV-2 and other Coronaviruses.

More than 5 million people have died from COVID-19 worldwide. Current vaccines provide significant protection against severe disease, but as new, potentially more contagious variants emerge, researchers recognised that vaccines may need to be updated – and the new UCLA findings point toward a strategy that may help increase protection and long-term immunity. The researchers are now conducting further studies to evaluate viral polymerase as a potential new vaccine component.

The researchers work at the Eli and Edythe Broad Center of Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at UCLA. The study has been published in the ‘Cell Reports Journal’.

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Doctors explain how Delta variant can infect those who are fully vaccinated, lead to increase in hospitalizations

SAN ANTONIO – The number of COVID-19 Delta variant cases is going up in San Antonio, with a 66% increase in hospitalizations in the last week, according to city data.

The area is also seeing breakthrough cases, which yield a COVID-19 positive test result in someone who is fully vaccinated. An internal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention document suggests a vaccinated person who becomes infected can pass the virus on just as easily as someone who isn’t.

“The previous variant, one person would give it to maybe two, three people. The virus with this variant, it’s in the range of giving it to eight to nine people. So it’s really like a different virus. It’s just much more contagious,” said Dr. Jan Patterson, an infectious disease specialist at UT Health San Antonio.

According to the CDC, the COVID-19 Delta variant can spread as easily as chickenpox. Its high viral load and transmissibility rate are what make it so dangerous.

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“There’s much more virus in the upper respiratory tract, which makes it more transmission, so this is why even fully vaccinated people can get a mild infection now,” Patterson said.

Rita Espinoza, chief of epidemiology at the San Antonio Metropolitan Health District, said that, although vaccinated people can still get infected, the vaccine is still the best way to protect yourself.

“(The vaccine is) there to protect you from severe illness, hospitalizations and deaths, which is the message we’ve been saying all along — that it may not prevent you from contracting COVID, but hopefully you would have a milder illness,” Espinoza said.

She added that 95% of hospitalizations in the San Antonio area were of people who were not vaccinated.

The CDC has reinstated its recommendation on mask-wearing regardless of vaccination status.

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An investigation into what scientists believe was a coronavirus outbreak in Provincetown, Massachusetts, had nearly 900 people infected, 74% of whom were vaccinated.

“Unfortunately, we’re in a new phase of this pandemic. It means we need to wear our masks indoors, and it means you need to get your vaccination if you haven’t already,” Patterson said.

Copyright 2021 by KSAT – All rights reserved.

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Over 300 New Cases Reported – CBS Baltimore

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (WJZ) — Over 300 new COVID-19 cases are reported here in Maryland, making it the 12th straight day the state has reported more than 100 new cases.

Doctors said the new cases are fueled by the Delta variant targeting those who are unvaccinated.

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Since the pandemic began, there were 465,643 total confirmed cases and 9,587 deaths.

There are 159 people currently hospitalized with COVID-19.

As of Saturday, there are 3,530,114 Marylanders fully vaccinated. The state has administered 7,110,137 doses. Of those, 3,580,023 are first doses with 6,464 administered in the past 24 hours. They have given out 3,260,224 second doses, 4,975 in the last day.

The state began to administer the Johnson & Johnson vaccine again in April, after the CDC and FDA lifted their pause on the vaccine due to a rare blood clot found in some women.

As of Wednesday a total of 269,890 Marylanders have received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, 428 in the last day.

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The state reported 76.6% of all adults in Maryland have received at least one dose of the vaccine Wednesday.

CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES: 

By County

County Cases Deaths
Allegany 7,084 (211) 1*
Anne Arundel 44,318 (654) 15*
Baltimore 66,335 (1,650) 41*
Baltimore City 53,413 (1,239) 25*
Calvert 4,274 (85) 1*
Caroline 2,363 (30) 0*
Carroll 9,589 (249) 6*
Cecil 6,444 (154) 3*
Charles 11,077 (215) 2*
Dorchester 2,866 (64) 1*
Frederick 19,960 (334) 10*
Garrett 2,066 (65) 1*
Harford 16,775 (297) 6*
Howard 19,487 (252) 7*
Kent 1,365 (49) 2*
Montgomery 71,742 (1,580) 51*
Prince George’s 86,236 (1,562) 40*
Queen Anne’s 3,029 (51) 1*
St. Mary’s 6,134 (132) 0*
Somerset 2,633 (42) 0*
Talbot 2,198 (45) 0*
Washington 14,733 (330) 4*
Wicomico 7,795 (174) 0*
Worcester 3,727 (105) 1*
Data not available 0 (18) 1*

By Age Range and Gender

Age/Gender Cases Deaths
0-9 26,490 (3) 0*
10-19 48,149 (6) 1*
20-29 85,455 (44) 1*
30-39 79,804 (108) 6*
40-49 69,299 (291) 5*
50-59 69,149 (815) 32*
60-69 46,042 (1,636) 26*
70-79 25,253 (2,429) 44*
80+ 16,002 (4,253) 104*
Data not available 0 (2) 0*
Female 243,557 (4,641) 106*
Male 222,086 (4,946) 113*
Unknown Gender 0 (0) 0*

By Race and Ethnicity

Race/Ethnicity Cases Deaths
African-American (NH) 145,510 (3,480) 80*
Asian (NH) 11,539 (329) 11*
White (NH) 165,169 (4,822) 107*
Hispanic 70,787 (838) 19*
Other (NH) 21,787 (103) 1*
Data not available 50,851 (15) 1*

 

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As Covid Cases Rise In Maryland And Nationally, Officials Renew Push For Vaccinations – CBS Baltimore

ANNAPOLIS, Md. (WJZ) — Nearly 300 new COVID-19 cases are reported here in Maryland, making it the 11th straight day the state has reported more than 100 new cases.

Doctors said the new cases are fueled by the Delta variant targeting those who are unvaccinated.

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With COVID cases surging and that Delta variant spreading nationwide, health officials are sounding the alarm and renewing their push to get vaccinated.

“It’s incredibly important now especially with the Delta variant becoming so prevalent. We want to reach as many members of the community as possible.“ said Karen Eichelman, a nurse with St. Agnes Hospital.

In Maryland, the numbers are up across the board.

Not only were 300 new cases reported Friday, but the positivity rate now has climbed to 1.81 percent and hospitalizations increased from 11 to 163. Of those hospitalized, 109 remain in acute care and 43 remain in the Intensive Care Unit.

Gov. Larry Hogan targeted the unvaccinated in a podcast, saying now is the time to step up.

“It breaks my heart that we can’t break through, and we can’t convince some of these folks [to get vaccinated] because it’s the simplest thing to do to keep you and your family and your loved ones safe,” he said.

Friday, the state health department joined forces with Kaiser Permanente to hold vaccination clinics at hair salons and barbershops, hoping to tackle any apprehension.

“I don’t want to do it, but then I come here to visit my friend, and they convince me to do it,” said Horacio Hernandez of Baltimore.

With the Delta variant wreaking havoc on those who are unvaccinated, many say now is the time to act.

“I felt like I need it, and I ain’t trying to die. I’m trying to survive so I did what was the protocol,” said a man named Mo from Baltimore.

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Hogan said 100 percent of the COVID-19-related deaths since June have been from unvaccinated people.

Since the pandemic began, there were 465,326 total confirmed cases and 9,582 deaths.

As of Wednesday, there are 3,524,711 Marylanders fully vaccinated. The state has administered 7,098,270 doses. Of those, 3,573,559 are first doses with 5,788 administered in the past 24 hours. They have given out 3,255,249 second doses, 4,919 in the last day.

The state began to administer the Johnson & Johnson vaccine again in April, after the CDC and FDA lifted their pause on the vaccine due to a rare blood clot found in some women.

As of Wednesday a total of 269,462 Marylanders have received the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, 369 in the last day.

The state reported 76.5% of all adults in Maryland have received at least one dose of the vaccine Wednesday.

CORONAVIRUS RESOURCES: 

Here’s a breakdown of the numbers:

By County

County Cases Deaths
Allegany 7,081 (211) 1*
Anne Arundel 44,245 (654) 15*
Baltimore 66,252 (1,649) 41*
Baltimore City 53,373 (1,237) 25*
Calvert 4,264 (85) 1*
Caroline 2,363 (30) 0*
Carroll 9,583 (249) 6*
Cecil 6,422 (153) 3*
Charles 11,059 (215) 2*
Dorchester 2,865 (64) 1*
Frederick 19,942 (334) 10*
Garrett 2,060 (64) 1*
Harford 16,747 (296) 6*
Howard 19,463 (252) 7*
Kent 1,363 (49) 2*
Montgomery 71,636 (1,579) 51*
Prince George’s 86,125 (1,562) 40*
Queen Anne’s 3,023 (51) 1*
St. Mary’s 6,119 (132) 0*
Somerset 2,632 (42) 0*
Talbot 2,195 (45) 0*
Washington 14,723 (330) 4*
Wicomico 7,781 (174) 0*
Worcester 3,722 (105) 1*
Data not available 0 (17) 1*

By Age Range and Gender

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Age/Gender Cases Deaths
0-9 26,435 (3) 0*
10-19 48,063 (6) 1*
20-29 85,339 (44) 1*
30-39 79,685 (108) 6*
40-49 69,215 (290) 5*
50-59 69,069 (814) 32*
60-69 46,006 (1,633) 26*
70-79 25,235 (2,428) 44*
80+ 15,991 (4,251) 104*
Data not available 0 (2) 0*
Female 243,244 (4,634) 106*
Male 221,794 (4,945) 113*
Unknown Gender 0 (0) 0*

By Race and Ethnicity

Race/Ethnicity Cases Deaths
African-American (NH) 145,280 (3,474) 80*
Asian (NH) 11,521 (329) 11*
White (NH) 164,894 (4,821) 107*
Hispanic 70,714 (838) 19*
Other (NH) 21,764 (103) 1*
Data not available 50,865 (14) 1*

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Californians 50 and over eligible for COVID-19 vaccine April 1

REMAIN LOW AND STEADY. STATE HEALTH OFFICIALS SAY THAT ONCE AGAIN, THERE WERE JUST UNDER TWO THOUSAND NEW INFECTIONS ON TUESDAY. THE POSITIVITY RATE IS 1.8%. THAT’S AMONG THE LOWEST IN THE COUNTRY. TY: WITH THOSE PROMISING NUMBERS, KCRA 3’S BRIAN HICKEY IS LIVE IN SACRAMENTO WITH A LOOK AT THE VACCINATION CHANGES TODAY. >> ANYONE 50 AND OVER IS ELIGIBLE TO GET THE VACCINE TODAY. THAT’S ABOUT A THIRD OF CALIFORNIA’S POPULATION ELIGIBLE. IF YOU CAN FIND AN APPOINTMENT. THAT ADDS UP TO 10.6 MILLION PEOPLE ELIGIBLE FOR THE VACCINE THROUGH THE SUPPLY OF DOSES CONTINUES TO BE A CHALLENGE FOR CLINICS AND PHARMACIES. ON THE MY WEBSITE, RESIDENTS MAY NEED TO WAIT SEVERAL WEEKS AS MORE PEOPLE BECOME ELIGIBLE. THE STATE HAS APPROVED 50 AND OLDER, BUT THE VACCINE IS SAFE AND EFFECTIVE FOR THOSE 12 AND OLDER. SOME ARE OPENING THEIR VACCINES UP — TO THOSE AT 16 AND OLDER. AMADOR COUNTY IS OFFERING IT TO ANYONE 18 AND OLDER. DOCTORS SAY FOR EVERY PERSON WHO GETS A SHOT WE ARE ONE STEP CLOSER TO ENDING THE PANDEMIC. >> THE END IS IN SIGHT. WE HAVE A NUMBER OF EXCELLENT, SAFE, AND EFFECTIVE VACCINES. AS IN HIS WE CAN GET THOSE ADMINISTERED, — AND AS SOON AS WE CAN GET THOSE ADMINISTERED WE CAN RETURN TO A SENSE OF NORMAL. ANNETTE — SOME ADVICE TO GET THE APPOINTMENTS. YOU ARE URGED TO CHECK WITH YOUR PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PROVIDERS. YOU CAN ALSO GO TO THE MIKE TURNER WEBSITE AND REGISTER THEIR. IT WILL SEND YOU A NOTIFICATION. ALSO, THERE’S ANOTHER WEBSITE CALLED VACCINE FINDER. I WENT IN AND PUT IN THE SACRAMENTO ZIP CODE AND A 50 MILE RADIUS AND I WAS ABLE TO FIND A COUPLE LOCATIONS THAT HAD AVAILABILITY FOR NEXT WEEK. YOU HAVE TO KEEP SEARCHING AND BE PERSISTENT. IF YOU DON’T FIND ONE TODAY, TRY AGAIN TOMORROW. EVERYONE IS TRYING TO GET ONE AND THERE’S NOT ENOUGH TO GO AROUND. BE PERSISTEN

Californians 50 and over eligible for COVID-19 vaccine today

Starting Thursday, all Californians 50 and older are now eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine. Everyone ages 16 or older will be eligible on April 15. What remains an issue in the fight against the virus is supply, which continues to be limited across the state.You can find the state’s latest updates on www.covid19.ca.gov/vaccines and check the notification tool My Turn for information on eligibility and to schedule appointments. County health department websites are also a great tool for seeing what vaccine options are available. The state also promotes the online tool Vaccine Finder to find a vaccination site near you. According to California’s Department of Public Health, health care providers can make the call to give doses of the vaccine to people outside eligible groups in order to avoid wasting them. Here’s what people without appointments should know about vaccine chasing.Some counties have opened vaccines to those 16 and over, including Stanislaus and Butte counties, while Amador is offering the vaccine to residents 18 and over. KCRA 3 reached out to counties and health care providers to see what options are available for people trying to make vaccination appointments.Sacramento CountyAppointments cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.On April 1, appointments will be opened to those ages 50 and older.Appointments are necessary at this time.No walk-up clinics.Appointments can be made through the county’s website.Yolo CountyAppointments cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.It’s possible some appointments may be opened this week for those becoming eligible April 1.Appointments are necessary at this time.No walk-up clinics.Appointments can be made through the county’s website.Placer CountyAppointments at county site cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.Other local providers allow prescheduled appointments, including Remedy RX, a county pharmacy partner.Appointments are necessary at this time.No walk-up clinics.Appointments can be made through the county’s website.Stanislaus CountyAppointments at county site cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine. County residents 16 years old and up are eligible for COVID-19 vaccines starting April 1. Appointments recommended.Walk-in at all county sites available, while vaccine supply lasts.Appointments can be made through the state’s scheduling system, MyTurn, or by calling 833-422-4225.San Joaquin CountyAppointments at county site cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.Residents can sign up through the state’s scheduling site, MyTurn to sign up for notification when eligible to make an appointment.Appointments are necessary at this time.Not currently taking first-dose appointments at county sites.No walk-up clinics.Appointments can be made through MyTurn or through the county’s website.Kaiser PermanenteAppointments cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.Updates on eligibility and appointments available here.Dignity HealthNon-members are eligible to make appointments.No walk-up clinics.Appointments can be made through MyTurn.Major pharmacy chains CVS, Rite Aid and Walgreens are also involved in vaccination efforts.You may also be eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine by volunteering at a clinic. Here is how you can find volunteer opportunities. | MORE | COVID-19 vaccines in California: Everything you need to knowFor every person who gets inoculated, we become one step closer to ending the pandemic, health care experts say.”The end is in sight,” said Dr. Nicolas Sawyer with UC Davis Health. “We have a number of safe and excellent vaccines, and as soon as we can get those administered to the majority of the population and reach herd immunity, we’re going to be able to return to a sense of new normal.” App users, click here to see the below charts.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

Starting Thursday, all Californians 50 and older are now eligible for the COVID-19 vaccine.

Everyone ages 16 or older will be eligible on April 15. What remains an issue in the fight against the virus is supply, which continues to be limited across the state.

You can find the state’s latest updates on www.covid19.ca.gov/vaccines and check the notification tool My Turn for information on eligibility and to schedule appointments. County health department websites are also a great tool for seeing what vaccine options are available. The state also promotes the online tool Vaccine Finder to find a vaccination site near you.

According to California’s Department of Public Health, health care providers can make the call to give doses of the vaccine to people outside eligible groups in order to avoid wasting them. Here’s what people without appointments should know about vaccine chasing.

Some counties have opened vaccines to those 16 and over, including Stanislaus and Butte counties, while Amador is offering the vaccine to residents 18 and over.

KCRA 3 reached out to counties and health care providers to see what options are available for people trying to make vaccination appointments.

Sacramento County

  • Appointments cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.
  • On April 1, appointments will be opened to those ages 50 and older.
  • Appointments are necessary at this time.
  • No walk-up clinics.
  • Appointments can be made through the county’s website.

Yolo County

  • Appointments cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.
  • It’s possible some appointments may be opened this week for those becoming eligible April 1.
  • Appointments are necessary at this time.
  • No walk-up clinics.
  • Appointments can be made through the county’s website.

Placer County

  • Appointments at county site cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.
  • Other local providers allow prescheduled appointments, including Remedy RX, a county pharmacy partner.
  • Appointments are necessary at this time.
  • No walk-up clinics.
  • Appointments can be made through the county’s website.

Stanislaus County

  • Appointments at county site cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine. County residents 16 years old and up are eligible for COVID-19 vaccines starting April 1.
  • Appointments recommended.
  • Walk-in at all county sites available, while vaccine supply lasts.
  • Appointments can be made through the state’s scheduling system, MyTurn, or by calling 833-422-4225.

San Joaquin County

  • Appointments at county site cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.
  • Residents can sign up through the state’s scheduling site, MyTurn to sign up for notification when eligible to make an appointment.
  • Appointments are necessary at this time.
  • Not currently taking first-dose appointments at county sites.
  • No walk-up clinics.
  • Appointments can be made through MyTurn or through the county’s website.

Kaiser Permanente

  • Appointments cannot be prescheduled unless a person is eligible to receive the vaccine.
  • Updates on eligibility and appointments available here.

Dignity Health

  • Non-members are eligible to make appointments.
  • No walk-up clinics.
  • Appointments can be made through MyTurn.

Major pharmacy chains CVS, Rite Aid and Walgreens are also involved in vaccination efforts.

You may also be eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine by volunteering at a clinic. Here is how you can find volunteer opportunities.

| MORE | COVID-19 vaccines in California: Everything you need to know

For every person who gets inoculated, we become one step closer to ending the pandemic, health care experts say.

“The end is in sight,” said Dr. Nicolas Sawyer with UC Davis Health. “We have a number of safe and excellent vaccines, and as soon as we can get those administered to the majority of the population and reach herd immunity, we’re going to be able to return to a sense of new normal.”

App users, click here to see the below charts.

Read original article here